Wolfenstein 3-D is a World War II themed first-person shooter developed by id Software and published by Apogee for MS-DOS in 1992 and then ported to several other platforms. The game is based on a much older game, Escape From Castle Wolfenstein, and, like the original, you play a prisoner of war must escape from a Nazi dungeon. Additional episodes were added where you infiltrate Nazi strongholds and kill Hitler and other Nazi leaders. Wolfenstein 3-D is a video game milestone being one of the first hugely popular FPSs.

I first played Wolfenstein 3D in the early 1990s and was really impressed, not just by the 3D perspective, but also the gratuitous violence and digital speech. I rarely played the game fairly, usually relying on cheats to skip through most of the game, but I did play a few of the episodes properly.

This was also one of the first games I spent a lot of time trying to modify. I was able to get my hands on a map editor, and I made several custom maps for the game.

Contents

Status

I do not own Wolfenstein 3D, but have beaten the first three episodes at Bring 'Em On difficulty.

Review

Overall: 5/10

Best Version: DOS

Good

The game, for its time, is a beautiful example of a first-person shooter done right.

Though cartoonish, the graphics are well-drawn and attractive.

The enemy AI is pretty dumb, but it does sometimes cause some rather shocking results when they inadvertently sneak up on you from behind.

Bobby Prince's incorporation of Nazi and American political music was a nice touch.

The sliding secret doors is a really cool addition.

The addition of a secret 3-D Pac-Man level was pretty cool.

Bad

The game tends to become monotonous. After the third episode, you've seen nearly everything the game has to offer save the remaining bosses.

The use of lives and points doesn't really fit the game's theme.

Ugly

Nothing.

Boxes

Due to the Nazi imagery, Apogee used their logo as the cover art in several European countries.

This is the original US mail-order art, later reused for the Shareware copies and the digital release. BJ looks like a roided out murderous psychoticpath, especially when the only notion he's killing Nazis is the helmet of the dead guard. Still, it's well-painted, and I like the logo. This is my favorite.

This is the US box art used in stores. BJ is just as much a body builder, but a little less insane. The guards look even less like Nazis than before, although the top guard is reminiscent of the cover of the original Escape From Castle Wolfenstein. This art was reused for the Game Boy Advance, iOS, and modern emulated platforms.

The UK release went all out with swastikas and Hitler, too bad it's amateurishly painted.